I'm probably a Libertarian, if I had to put myself in any category. But you don't come out and talk about these things, for obvious reasons.
Democracy is the current industry standard political system, but unfortunately it is ill-suited for a libertarian state.
I'm not a complete libertarian. There is a proper role in some areas of the government to have rules and regulations - I'm not an anarchist.
I want people to know we throw real parties. We don't need more boring libertarian or conservative conferences.
I come to the table from a conservative or libertarian point of view, and I admit that. I'm a commentator. I'm not a journalist or anything else.
I think Tierney is also more libertarian than he is conservative in the conventional sense.
My libertarian friends are probably getting a little upset now but I think that's because they never appreciate the benefits of local fascism.
I'm a Christian-libertarian-environmentalist-capitalist-lunatic. It's a humorous way for me to describe that I'm not stereotypical.
That's the first sign you know you're a Libertarian. You see the red light. You stop. You realize that there's not a car in sight. And you put your foot on the gas.
I do have an intense respect for pacifists, because I believe that ultimately, if we are to have a truly humanistic as well as libertarian society, violence will have to be banished on this planet.
A Libertarian society of unfettered individualism spreads its benefits to virtually everyone - not just those who have the resources to seize political power.
I am from an F.D.R. liberal-Democratic family. With proximity to government, I have become more libertarian.
The libertarian worship of individual freedom, and contempt for social convention, comes easiest to people who have never really had to grow up.
Certainly the emphasis I place in this chapter on coordination of behavior and cooperation to mutual benefit is something that ought to be very congenial to people in the libertarian tradition.
My eldest son you know, in his short life so far, he's experimented with Corbynism, Communism, Brexit. He's now Welsh nationalist and libertarian.
There ain't no such thing as a free lunch." A Libertarian Movement slogan - The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress, 1907.
Lots of us have been plugging away, building a platform to talk about libertarian communism and post-scarcity economics.
There's no way that a third party wins without being in the presidential debates. I think the vast majority of Americans are Libertarian; they just don't know it.
I’m not into the whole Austrian type, strongly libertarian economics. I like more mainstream economics.
I'm a hardcore libertarian - I want everything legal - but I also believe that you have the right to free association.
I believe in libertarian options because they allow an interesting management of the capital and are based on co-operation, reciprocity, contract, federation.
If there is a Republican or a Libertarian or Green Party person that believes in Medicare for all, then that's our kind of person.
I want to gag sometimes when I see who "we" are recommending that people vote for, and not just as a libertarian.
I am libertarian, and Americans generally are, more than, say, Canadians and Australians.
St. Kitts' government is much more libertarian compared with the U.S. It's not even close.
Well, I'm a libertarian conservative, so I believe in limited government/maximum individual freedom.
I never thought I was a libertarian until I picked up Reason magazine and realized I agree with everything they had printed.
What I was really saying in 'The Examined Life' was that I was no longer as hardcore a libertarian as I had been before.
We're seeing conservatives and evangelicals and libertarian and Reagan Democrats all coming together as one, and that terrifies Washington, D.C.
What...can the government do to help the poor? The only answer is the libertarian answer: Get out of the way.
Never trust anyone who calls himself a libertarian socialist. They're bound to be deeply confused, at best.
One of the great weaknesses of standard libertarian theory is that it tends to push too hard by elevating presumptions into absolutes.
Ever since college, I have been a libertarian - socially liberal and fiscally conservative. I believe in individual liberty and personal responsibility.
I'm not a knee-jerk conservative. I passionately believe in free markets and less government, but not to the point of being a libertarian.
I have said many times in the past I don't choose to be vice president, either Republican, Democrat, Libertarian or vegetarian.
My wife and I are both Libertarian; she was a Democrat and I was a Republican, and we both met in the middle somewhere.
I believe in taxation and health care that is outside the usual libertarian mandate, because I don't want people to have to suffer. It's as simple as that.
I'm always looking for an opportunity to bring progressive Democrats together with some conservative libertarian types, because there are places where we can agree.
I became very much, if I have to describe myself, I'm sort of a Libertarian Capitalist, and I was looking for, what's the economic engine that's going to drive us into space?
See, as a libertarian, I am actually far more liberal on the issue of immigration than many people might expect.
I'm not a libertarian in the sense that I think all these social programs should be abolished in any sense.
The best government is the least government. In some areas, I'm libertarian. I don't subscribe to any one party; they are all bad.
The only organized political party with a Christian vision of morality is the Libertarian Party.
Hey, I'm a libertarian. I think out of control spending messes up everything.
I'd describe myself as a sexual libertarian - but I'm not a libertine. "To each his own" is my motto.
There's a very comfortable techno-libertarian culture where you think you're doing the right thing.
I'm a staunch civil libertarian; I really believe that the individual is more important than any societal value.
The earliest depiction of libertarian eugenics may have appeared in a science fiction novel, Robert Heinlein's 1942 tale 'Beyond This Horizon.'
The Libertarian Party holds that same-sex marriages are an individual issue and that the government has no right to determine with whom a person should have a relationship.
Western civilization is based upon the libertarian principle, and all its achievements are the results of the action of free men.
The libertarian can have no truck with 'left' or 'right' because he regrets any form of authoritarianism - the use of police force to control the creative life of man.
Economics is sometimes associated with the study and defense of selfishness and material inequality, but it has an egalitarian and civil libertarian core that should be celebrated.
Throughout the nation's history, the national destiny of the United States has been understood in antimilitaristic, libertarian terms.
At first the relevance of chattel slavery to libertarian ideals was noted only in individual passages of isolated pamphlets.
To describe Peter Thiel as simply a libertarian wildly understates the case. His belief system is based on unapologetic selfishness and economic Darwinism.
I'd like to see a Republican Party that embraces a lot of the libertarian ideas.
I'll work with anyone - and I really do mean that - Democrat, Republican, independent, Libertarian, contrarian, vegetarian.
I'm a libertarian-conservative. I believe the state should focus on defending lives, rights, and property instead of depriving its citizens of their God-given liberties.
In my view, as a country we need to rediscover some of that skepticism about government and revisit that libertarian agenda.
Trying to be a socialist and a libertarian is obviously a very difficult balancing act, which nobody has pulled off too successfully in this century.
This site uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience.
More info...